Report on the Human Rights Situation of Migrants and Refugees in Libya
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Desperate and Dangerous: Report on the human rights situation of migrants and refugees in Libya 20 December 2018 United Nations Support Mission in Libya Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights 1 Table of Contents 1. Executive summary ............................................................................................................................. 4 2. Introduction and methodology .......................................................................................................... 8 3. Context ............................................................................................................................................... 10 3.1 Snapshot – Migrants and Refugees in Libya .................................................................................... 10 3.2 Central Mediterranean Sea route – Increasing role of the Libyan Coast Guard ............................... 12 3.2.1 Shifting search and rescue operations in international waters ................................................... 13 3.2.2 Impeding search and rescue operations of humanitarian NGOs in international waters ........... 15 3.2.3 Increasing coordination of rescues in international waters by LCG .......................................... 17 3.3 Human Rights Due Diligence Policy ................................................................................................ 18 3.4 European Union migration approach in Libya .................................................................................. 19 4. Legal framework ............................................................................................................................... 22 4.1 International law ............................................................................................................................... 22 4.2 National law ...................................................................................................................................... 24 5. Findings of violations and abuses against migrants and refugees in Libya ................................. 25 5.1 Land journeys from hell – abuses by smugglers and traffickers ....................................................... 26 5.1.1 Inhuman conditions, starvation, abuse and exploitation ............................................................ 27 5.1.2 Killings and other deaths in captivity......................................................................................... 29 5.1.3 Rape, forced prostitution and other sexual violence .................................................................. 31 5.2 Dangerous sea crossings and rescues ................................................................................................ 34 5.3 Violations in migration-related detention ......................................................................................... 38 5.3.1. Arbitrary and indefinite detention ............................................................................................. 39 5.3.2 Detention conditions .................................................................................................................. 42 5.3.3 Torture and other ill-treatment ................................................................................................... 44 5.3.4 Rape and other sexual and gender-based violence ..................................................................... 45 5.3.5 Forced labour ............................................................................................................................. 47 5.4 Violations in non-migration related detention .................................................................................. 47 5.4.1 Arbitrary detention and inadequate detention conditions .......................................................... 47 2 5.4.2 Torture and other ill-treatment ................................................................................................... 49 5.5 Excessive use of force ....................................................................................................................... 50 5.6. Violations and abuses outside the context of detention ................................................................... 51 5.6.1 Assault and theft in the streets ................................................................................................... 52 5.6.2 Unpaid wages ............................................................................................................................. 52 5.6.3 Access to health or denial of medical treatment ........................................................................ 54 5.7 Human rights defenders assisting migrants and refugees ................................................................. 54 6. Recommendations ............................................................................................................................. 55 6.1 To the Libyan authorities: ................................................................................................................. 55 6.2 To the European Union and its Member States: ............................................................................... 58 6.3 To United Nations agencies and other international actors working in Libya: ................................. 60 6.4 To countries of origin: ...................................................................................................................... 61 3 1. Executive summary Migrants and refugees suffer unimaginable horrors during their transit through and stay in Libya. From the moment they step onto Libyan soil, they become vulnerable to unlawful killings, torture and other ill-treatment, arbitrary detention and unlawful deprivation of liberty, rape and other forms of sexual and gender-based violence, slavery and forced labour, extortion and exploitation by both State and non-State actors. Published jointly by the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), this report describes patterns of serious human rights violations and abuses suffered by migrants and refugees in Libya at the hands of State officials and members of armed groups, as well as atrocities committed by smugglers and traffickers, amid the failure of the Libyan authorities to address these violations and abuses and provide redress to victims. The findings in this report are primarily based on around 1,300 first-hand accounts1 and other information gathered by human rights officers in UNSMIL between January 2017 and August 2018, including during regular monitoring visits to 11 immigration detention centres in Libya. UNSMIL also visited Nigeria in December 2017 and Italy in June 2018 to interview migrants who had been repatriated or had left Libya. This report traces the entire journey of migrants and refugees through Libya, which is marred by considerable risks of serious human rights violations and abuses at every step of the way. The report documents such violations from the moment migrants and refugees cross Libya’s southern border throughout their journey to the northern coast. The journey continues with the perilous Mediterranean Sea crossings, increasingly ending in interception or rescue by the Libyan Coast Guard (LCG) and then transfer back to Libya where migrants face indefinite detention and frequent torture and other ill-treatment in centres unfit for human habitation. Despite the overwhelming evidence of human rights violations and abuses, Libyan authorities have thus far appeared largely unable or unwilling to put an end to violations and abuses committed against migrants and refugees. UNSMIL and OHCHR regret that the Libyan authorities have failed to implement the recommendations included in their joint report “Detained and Dehumanized”: Report on Human Rights Abuses Against Migrants in Libya. issued on 13 December 2016. Given the lack of progress in addressing the rampant human rights violations and abuses against migrants and refugees in Libya, their situation has not improved in the past two years, despite overwhelming evidence of horrific abuses and increased attention given to the issue at global and regional levels. Years of armed conflict and political divisions have weakened Libyan institutions, including the judiciary, which have been unable, if not unwilling, to address the plethora of abuses and violations committed against migrants and refugees by smugglers, traffickers, members of armed groups and State officials, with near total impunity. The vacuum left by the State following the 2011 uprising 1 This figure includes migrants and refugees interviewed individually and in groups. 4 and armed conflict has been filled by a multitude of armed groups in control of large swaths of Libya’s territory, borders, and key installations. These armed groups were increasingly integrated into State institutions without any vetting processes to remove those with problematic human rights records, although the Government of National Accord, following the outbreak of violence in Tripoli in September 2018, has promised to take steps to diminish the influence of armed groups on state institutions. This climate of lawlessness provides fertile ground for thriving illicit activities, such as trafficking in human beings and criminal smuggling, and leaves migrant and refugee men, women and children at the mercy of countless predators who view them as commodities to be exploited and extorted for